Information Segregation Conference
When: June 4-5, 2026
Where: The African Institute for Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 
(ACEPS<https://www.uj.ac.za/faculties/humanities/departments-2/philosophy/philosophy-centres/african-centre-for-epistemology-and-philosophy-of-science>),
 University of Johannesburg
CfA:
Physical segregation of human beings has an epistemic aspect: when individuals 
are required to occupy separate spaces, information is consequently segregated, 
creating barriers to the generation and transmission of knowledge.  If there is 
a norm that says folks who live uptown ought to stay uptown and folks who live 
downtown ought to stay downtown, an obvious consequence will be ignorance of 
what things are like on the other side of town (with asymmetries between uptown 
and downtown kinds of ignorance familiar from standpoint and feminist theory).  
This kind of ignorance is a familiar feature of racial segregation, and more 
broadly of norms that proscribe freedom of movement.  This conference is 
devoted to discussion of the mechanisms that sustain information segregation 
and its epistemological, ethical, and political consequences, along with 
related issues in ethics, political philosophy, and social epistemology.
Our questions include:

  *   Does physical segregation entail information segregation?
  *   Is information segregation always problematic? (Consider e.g. norms 
establishing privacy.) Are some forms inevitable? (Consider e.g. information 
about the phenomenal qualities of your lived experience.)
  *   Who is responsible for the ignorance that constitutes information 
segregation?  What duties do individuals, institutions, and the state have to 
mitigate information segregation?
  *   What role does information segregation play in sustaining injust social 
and political systems?
  *   Does information segregation constitute a violation of individuals' right 
to know?
  *   How do communication technologies (social media platforms, vertical 
video, chatbots) contribute to or mitigate information segregation?
  *   Repairing relationships sometimes comes with a decision to "forgive and 
forget"; should this be taken literally, as prescribing ignorance of past 
transgressions or trauma?
Confirmed Speakers:

  *   Joanna Burch-Brown (University of Bristol)
  *   Allan Hazlett (Washington University in St. Louis)
  *   Ryan Nefdt (University of Cape Town)
  *   Brianna Toole (Claremont McKenna College)
Organizers: Allan Hazlett (Washington University in St. Louis) and Veli Mitova 
(University of Johannesburg)
Abstract submission: If you would like to present at the conference, please 
send a 500-word abstract of a talk, to be presented in 30-40 minutes, to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> by February 15th, 2026.  
Acceptance decisions will be made by March 1st.
---
Veli Mitova
Professor and Director
African Institute for Epistemology and Philosophy of Science, University of 
Johannesburg


---------
SydPhil mailing list

To unsubscribe, change your membership options, find answers to common 
problems, or visit our online archives, please go to the list information page:

https://mailman.sydney.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/sydphil

Reply via email to